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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1910)
• •* A Trip to Curry Cotiuiy WHICH WAS MASTER? By MARY A. BOWERS Copyright, 1S1U. by American Pre»» Association I have just re'Utned Irom a trip' down in Curry county. and I fed HAS A SELECT STOCK OF called U|H»n to give your readers a part of my ex|>eneiice Thg weath Wines. Liqnors & Cigars er favored me and being much shel tered from the cool north and south Kle:«iii winds which we Bandonians so mu- h er joy, it seemed to me that I had LOlgltOüS IKE A (Ml NT EETRIGG been transferred to a section which CEHTSAL POINT HOGUE RIVER was right agreeable to an old fellow VALLEY like me. OREGON Langlois is building considerably BANDON OREGON CORRESPONDENCE since last year, quite a numlter ofj SOLICITED ■0 - new houses have been' erected, and { (This matter must not be reprinted with out special permission.] the ta w school building is quite an ' imposing structure. The next morn A WRONG THAT NEEDS RIGHTING ing after arriving in Langlois, I made The health of Americans of the fu a call at my friend Upton s, s, who. as ture would be vastly improved if their we know, is an invalid, but who ac mothers—the army of Immature girls now in school between the ages of cepts his condition as a wise m in Newly furnished large light r--< ms twelve and eighteen—were to devote anti makes the best o' it. ’telephone Electric L-gli’s less time und energy to Latin. French, Mr. Upton enjoyed the great l*ent«d by single night, week or geometry, history and “themes” for moni li the development of their intellects and pleasure of a visit from his brother, INQUIRE AT OFFICE OF a great deni more to home duties, work whom he had not seen for many on the lawu and in the gurdeu and to years. We had a pleasant eh it until other exercise anti recreation out of Mrs. Upton called for dinner, and The BANIXJN STEAM LAUNDRY doors for the building up of healthy and strong physiques, upon which fac nothing would but that I accept the if you wish a bottle cold-— tor chiefly their mission as mothers k nd invitation and eat with them. Call at the Eagle, and homemakers is to depend. We’ll I then drove to Pacific City or Lake If you love the goods that's old-- admit that this view will be consid Call at lire Eagle. ered a bH on the old fogy order by port; Ye«, it is i Ix-autt'ul an 1 ideal some, but it is nevertheless correct and location for a city or town, right in 'Taint no use to sit and blink one that will .be given Increased at among the trees undergrnwn with If you really need a drink. tention in the .veal's that are Just Just make a sign or ring a bell, ahead. There are several things to be I innunmerable rhododendron in full And you bet they'll treat you right righted in the school system at pres I bloom and flowers every» here. The Down at the Eagle ent in vogue over tile country. One of 1 -ke, with its five arms, lay peaceably the chief of these is the turning of the usually pale faced, anaemic Invalids before us, only a gasoline launch pt graduation time into girls physical causing a ripple on the smooth snr-i Alvin Munck, Prop ly robust ami able to take up the seri lace oi its mirror. BANilON, OREGON ous aud responsible duties of life. The The first accident that befell me credit for the situation which exists is as to f-Il into the han s of the largely due to a system which makes the curricula of public schools conform three printer devils, a-d a more Clarence J . Locae to college requirements when probably less than 10 per cent of the pupils en agreeable set of devils I could not -- O regon rolled will ever go to college; partly wish to meet. I was introdi.ced to B andon . bruÿgist und . I fiotlieca > y due to the blindness of teachers wed to the citizens ami shown the improve tin- system and stupidly ignorant of Is,nat in receipt of 11 now slock of the fact that children at thirteen do ments. and the people were sj hos not have the endurance of grown folks pitable that it made me fe« I as it I Drugs and CliomicHls. Pati-r.» mill at thirty, ami even more it is due to would like to live among them. I’ropri-tnry Preparations. Toilet shortsighted parents who through fool ocles l.'rngg - Stiii-it i- s. Perfumes One wing of the new hotel is near Krus'nes, Sponges. Soap, Nil«» am ish pride allow and sometimes encour age their dnnghh-rs to overwork that ing completion, and from appearance Candies, t Hgars, Tobaccos and Cig they may stand at the head of their it would seem that there will be arettes, Paints, Oils, Gia»« ••nd classes. Those collectively and Indi- Painter's Supplies. vidually responsible should get their plenty of visitors to fill it up. There heails together nini evolve a more ra is one stole, and I was told tnat tional system that will make it pos $.’o,ooo worth ot goods had to be BOOTS - AND SHOES sible for the girl—the finest and sweet- ¡-ut in a warehouse as the store build cst of God's creatures—to develop as You can't expect to get $2 worth he Intend«»! she should develop. mg is not large enough to contain for $ I, hut you can get your money's worth al all the goods on hand. THE DAUGHTER IN THE HOME. We next visited the coming saw All too many mothers make the mis LI mill of which the foundation is take of saving their daughters in every way and allowing them to tin little or already constructed; the b-al for the Dealer In Bouts and Shoes. none of the work about the house, boilers is laid, and in a short time Repairing neatly and promp when this not only means increased labors for the mother, but is a short the work will be finished and the tly done at lowest liv sighted policy for the daughter and mill ready lor operation, to partly ing prices particularly for those wtio will in all till the great demand tor lumber to probability later have the responsibil ity of a household on their bauds. drect many buildings of various When daughters in the home reach kinds which are now under contem the age of thirteen or fourteen they The BANDON CABINET ought to take tlie jot) <)( washing the plation. There is also a well filled butcher shop to supply tin wants of dishes, much of the sweeping and all of WORKS the dusting off their mothers' hands, the people in tlie meat line. besides being taught to do tlie plnin All kirdtf of Cabinet Bungalows of va.ious descriptions sewing and mending caused by their Bitterns and Models own presence in the home. Many are finished and many people are SASIl and DOORS mothers would rather do all this work living in tents. dNb Gzœn It was a mouth after their mar riage. Not a word had been spoken to interrupt that current of romance down which they had been sailing ever since they became conscious that they loved. But there is always a be ginning. “My dear," he said pettishly, "I HU(>- pose I must go through another day with a safety pin for a suspender but- ton'!” “Another day, dear! What do you mean "t" "If I remember aright this is the third time I have asked you to re- place the button that came off a week ago.” She made no reply, but weut to her workbasket, got out what was needed and sewed on the button. Komance had given place to reality. Front that moment she Ircgan the du ties of a wife. Her day was all for her husband. When she arose lu the morning her first duty was to see that he had what pleased him for break fast. She isiuri'd Ills coffee with her owu hand. Then when lie had gone for tin? day she superintended the household affairs, planning that every thing might be in order against Ills re turn. In tlie evening she consulted his pleasure. If he wished to go out she went out with him. If he preferred to stay at home she stayed home with him. It seemed to her that there was I scarcely an hour In the day that she was not working for him. And he? He went down to buninetis in the morning and worked hard all day—for her.’ When his competitors got ahead of him. when wrangling over disputed business transactions fretted him. when he failed to make I money or when he met with success It was all for her. She needed expen sive clothing, and he bought them for her. Every spring she must have new apparel, and the next spring, though It was not worn or faded, it was no longer in fashion. One season she must have a hat like au umbrella, and the next it must lie replaced by one no larger than a dinner plate. Her win ter coat must be short, and tin- next year it must be long. Since the hat could not lie shrunken nor tin* coat I lengthened, the.v must be cast off and new ones purchased. He wondered why garments never grew smaller, so that those purchased the year before might be reduced. One day she reproached him. "Tlie day Is not long enough.” she said, “for me to do all I linve to do for my master. I did not know wtien I married yon that 1 was bringing upon myself slavery. As a girl I could de vote all my time to myself. Then 1 was light hearted because I was free. I had no one’s clothes to mend except my own. I had no household duties. 1 spent tuy leisure time goiiig to thea ters, bulls aud such other amusements as I preferred. Oh, woe Is me that 1 should have married and become a slave!” And he replied: “From morning till night 1 am down town making money for you to spend for gowns and hats that won’t stay iu fashion long enough to get the ‘new’ off them. I must provide house rent and sustenance for you and the thou- than stiow their daughters how. but I-or sport, there are lots of rabbits saud other things that you require. I when analyzed this attitude of the never go fishing or shooting, as I did mothers Is usually traceable to a lack to shoot and the lake is full of trout before I was married, for now. having of pains, patience and true regard for of laige size. your necessities to supply, I have noth the daughters’ welfare. The average-. Lakeport cannot fail to prosper as ing left for indulging in those sports girl is w illing t<> help if taught how to of which I used to be so fond. My do so and made to feel that tlie as them are so many natural resources fowling piece went Into a fur coat for sistance Shat she does render is wortfi The second evening of my stay I you. and you are wearing my fishing while. accepted the hospitality of Mr. Bos- tackle on your head. Oil, woe is me, IT PAYS. sen, near Langlois. After a good that I married and became a slave!" One day a baby cayie. The point is now and tlicn raised supper, I was agreeably entertained The duties of tin- wife were chang whether it pays to sow clover with ed. The husband returned to tlie use small grain, particularly oats, if one with some veiy fine music, by Miss of safety pins in lieu of buttons. She plans to plow stubble and clover under Bossen, who has an elegant Kroeger had no longer time to mend ills linen. in the fall. The best opinion along piano. The hours passeel only too this line Is that it docs pay. the benefit His clothing remained torn. The baby needed all her attention, derivable from the clover turned under rapidly, and for my own pleasure I requiring more changes of clothing in being quite largely proport Innate to shall soon take another trip and en a day than her husband nettled in a the thriftiness of the clover plants and joy the society of jovial and ener week. She s]>eiit much time preparing the stand secured Even if such a the child's food, and then after she course is followed the benefit of the getic people w ho are building up a had got it down Idin he would throw clover to tlie land rarely fails to pay great city now in its infancy. it up. He hail cholic most of the time, for the seed. Where It Is possible to P ohl during which she must dandh* him, allow the clover to possess the ground walk him and give him medicines the following year, taking off a crop Every day he must have the sun and of hay In the early summer and plow Noah’s Anchors. air in his carriage, and his mother, un ing under the second growth in the A story of a pair of anchors is told willing to trust him to a nurse, trun fall, the benefits derived from the leg died him herself. When she was not ume are greatly increased. This is in the book entitled "To Kairwan the trundling him sin- was making or buy due to the fact that the older and Holy.” Kairwan is the Meccn of the west ing clothes for Idin, and when she was larger the root systems of the clover not doing these she was receiving in are the more extensive is the develop It is a city so sacred that women are structions from tlie doctor as to what ment of the nodules, which are tlie de allowed to move about in it but very she should put into Ids stomach and positories of the nitrogen which is little. One of the interesting sights what she should put over it. I taken from the air. it pays to grow is the .Mosque of Emir Ben Said Bon And the husband. He was now glad clover—pays for one year, but a good Muphtah. This mosque, with its six to get downtown In the morning to deal more for two. melon shaped domes, is the tomb of escape the baby’s squalls. He passed a most amusing old Moslem who died most of the night walking his son about the middle of the last century. THE SEED BED. back and A>rth when the boy hud Next to securing good seed that will He had great power over the bey and colic and was tired out with loss of grow there is no other respect in I managed affairs according to Ills own sleep. But in his office there was which the tiller of the soil should ex pleasure, Thia Moslem got possession quiet. Besides, in his office he was ercise greater care than in the prep in Tunis of four large anchors which master, which he was not at home. aration of the seed lied. More farm probably lielongod to some old men-of- One morning the husband, who hnd ers full down here and lessen the ca war a bandolier I on account of stress of t. fteti care of the baby during the pacity of their land to produce larg«> weather The gentleman with the long night that his wife might get “a little crops to a larger extent than In any mime was not content with any such sleep,' tiegan She old plaint. "I am other single way. Valuable land prosaic explanation of their origin. By your slave, ” Tids ffwnkened her own should receive something better than means of the labor of 500 Arabs he former words. “It is I who am your this thirty cent care, which is likely had the anchors dragged from Tunis slave.” practiced ns generally ns it is because unit deposlt<*d In front of his house. This started the wrangle again tlie sinners along this line don't real The transportation look live months. Words were getting high when tlie.v ize that for small grain to grow prop He then declared them to Is* the an was s diversion. erly the bed in which it is planted chors by wliirdi Nosh fastened tlie ark There came a sudden yell from t’se must I m - loose enough to make possible Io Mount Ararat. Tlie relics are now crib Both nisht-d to the baby. a ready circulation of air and moisture in tlie mosque of their former owner “Here Is our master.'* said the 2u-| from ths surface down and from the aud are regarded as holy liar. **Wt are bath his slaves." subaoli to the surfaca. Vienna Bakary And Cafe Fine Quality bread, Cakes, Pies and Pastry. First Class Restaurant Private Boxes for Private Parlies Everything Neat and Clean the best of service guaranteed Short orders at all hours from 5:30 a m to 10:00 p m M. Smith ROOMS and LODGING \l B R E E lì Job Work a Specialty China loset o.S idol ><>ar i Is. Picture Fra tn es an <1 Mouldings made to order Book Cases, in fact ev.-ry tiling in tIm Cabinet Line and High Class Finishing Strs. Inficici & Bandon Twin Screw, New and Fast 1st Class Passage, Up Freight, Our interests are your interests. Fair rates and good service our motto A. F. • Estaot'ook Co., 245 Cal. St., San Francisco J. H. JOHNSTON, Agent, Bandon, Oreg SHIELDS «fc KENNEDY III.At lDOi ITUS AND WAI.OXM AK i irs Wagons of All Kinds Made to Order Horseshoeing a Specialty Job Work attended to uroniptly and all work guaranteed to give satisfaction. reasonable. Shop on Atwater Street, Bandon, Oregon. Prices S S. ELIZABETH NEW STATE ROOMS INSTALLED Eight Day Service Between the Coquille River and San Francisco First-class Passenger Fare, - $7.50 Freight Rates, - $3 on Up Freight •J. E. AVALS FROM. Agent, Bandon. Oregon. E. & E. T. Kruse, owners and manager-, 24 California Si., San F ranriwo. Great Combination Offer rJ’’HE RECORDER management has made arrangements with the W. W. BINGHAM Bl ackerby $7.50 3.00 Building San Francisco Bulletin whereby we BANDON. OREGON can give subscribers the advantage of BANDON a gigantic combination offer that will Harness Shop furnish them all the news of the Full line of Harness, Sad dles, Bridles, Halters, Blankets and everything usually kept in a first- class harness shop. Repairing a Specialty country in a metropolitan daily and all the news of Bandon and vicinity in the Recorder at marvelous low price W. J. SABIN, Prop-| FURNISHED ROOMS AT I Pacific The Daily San Francisco Bulletin, The Bandon Recorder, Tota!, $3.00 per year 1.50 per year $4.50 MRS SARAH COSTELLO BANDON OREGON Both papers through this office if paid in advance, per year $2.75 City Transfer • All kinds of driving and translei- ing FoR SALE—mill wood, from Cody's mill $J.oo ¡»er Io« I Co-1 sold ami delivered at lour I prices J. Jcukitis, Prop. Read the Recorder / • • « • • •